Part 56 (1/2)
Ashe protested. And, indeed, as it turned out, there was no train worth the taking. Then Lord Parham sent a message that he hoped to appear at dinner.
Kitty locked her door while she was dressing, and Ashe, whose mind was a confusion of many feelings--anger, compunction, and that fascination which in her brilliant moods she exercised over him no less than over others--could get no speech with her.
They met on the threshold of the child's room, she coming out, he going in. But she wrenched herself from him and would say nothing. The report of the little boy was good; he smiled at his father, and Ashe felt a cooling balm in the touch of his soft hands and lips. He descended--in a more philosophical mind; inclined, at any rate, to ”d.a.m.n” Lord Parham.
What a fool the man must be! Why couldn't he have taken it with a laugh, and so turned the tables on Kitty?
Was there any good to be got out of apologizing? Ashe supposed he must attempt it some time that night. A precious awkward business! But relations had got to be restored somehow.
Lady Tranmore overtook him on the way down-stairs. In the press of the afternoon they had hardly seen each other.
”What is really wrong with Lord Parham, William?” she asked him, anxiously. Ashe hesitated, then whispered a word or two in her ear, begging her to keep the great man in play for the evening. He was to take her in, while Kitty would fall to the Bishop of the diocese.
”She gets on perfectly with the clergy,” said Lady Tranmore, with an involuntary sigh. Then, as the sense of humor was strong in both, they laughed. But it was a chilly and perfunctory laughter.
They had no sooner pa.s.sed into the main hall than Kitty came running down-stairs, with a large packet in her hand.
”Mr. Darrell!”
”At your service!” said Darrell, emerging from the shadows of one of the broad corridors of the ground-floor.
”Take it, please!” said Kitty, panting a little, as she gave the packet into his hands. ”If I look at it any more, I _might_ burn it!”
”Suppose you do!”
”No, no!” said Kitty, pus.h.i.+ng the bundle away, as he laughingly tendered it. ”I must see what happens!”
”Is the gap filled?”
She laid her finger on her lips. Her eyes danced. Then she hurried on to the drawing-room.
Whether it were the soothing presence of the clergy or no, certainly Kitty was no less triumphant at dinner than she had been in the afternoon. The chorus of fun and pleasure that surrounded her, while he himself sat, tired and bored, between Lady Edith Manley and Lady Tranmore, did but make her offence the greater in the eyes of Lord Parham. He had so far buried it in a complete and magnificent silence.
The meeting between him and his hostess before dinner had been marked by a strict conformity to all the rules. Kitty had inquired after his headache; Lord Parham expressed his regrets that he had missed so brilliant a party; and Kitty, flirting her fan, invented messages from the Royalties which, as most of those present knew, the Royalties had been far too well amused to think of. Then after this _pas seul_, in the presence of the crowded drawing-room, had been duly executed, Kitty retired to her Bishop, and Lord Parham led forth Lady Tranmore.
”What a lovely moon!” said Lady Edith Manley to the Dean. ”It makes even this house look romantic.”
They were walking outside the drawing-room windows, on a terrace which was, indeed, the only feature of the Haggart facade which possessed some architectural interest. A low bal.u.s.trade of terra-cotta, copied from a famous Italian villa, ran round it, broken by large terra-cotta pots now filled with orange-trees. Here and there between the orange-trees were statues transported from Naples in the late eighteenth century by a former Lord Tranmore. There was a Ceres and a Diana, a Vestal Virgin, an Athlete, and an Antinous, now brought into strange companions.h.i.+p under the windows of this ugly English house. Chipped and blackened as they were, and, to begin with, of a mere decorative importance, they still breathed into the English evening a note of Italy or Greece, of things lovely and immortal. The lamps in the sitting-rooms streamed out through the widely opened windows upon the terrace, checkering the marble figures, which now emerged sharply in the light, and now withdrew in the gloom; while at one point they shone plainly upon an empty pedestal before which the Dean and his companion paused.
The Dean looked at the inscription. ”What a pity! This once held a statue of Hebe holding a torch. It was struck by lightning fifty years ago.”
”Lady Kitty might stand for her to-night,” said Edith Manley.
For Kitty, the capricious, had appeared at dinner in a _quasi_-Greek dress, white, soft, and flowing, without an ornament. The Dean acquiesced, but rather sadly.
”I wish she had the bloom of Hebe! My dear Lady Edith, our hostess looks _ill_!”
”Does she? I can't tell--I admire her so!” said the woman beside him, upon whose charming eyes some fairy had breathed kindness and optimism from her cradle.
”_Ouf!_” cried Kitty, as she sprang across the sill of the window behind them. ”They're _all_ gone! The Bishop wishes me to become a vice-president of the Women's Diocesan a.s.sociation. And I've promised three curates to open bazaars. _Ah, mon Dieu!_” She raised her white arms with a wild gesture, and then beckoned to Eddie Helston, who was close beside her.
”Shall we try our dance?”